Search for: "Amos Guiora" Results 41 - 60 of 111
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12 Apr 2011, 7:58 am by Kenneth Anderson
Allowing the State to Rebut the Civilian Presumption”Abstract (pdf) | Paper (pdf)Professor Kenneth Anderson, “Targeted Killing, Drone Warfare, and the Chimera of Optimizing the Resort to Force”Abstract (pdf) | Paper (pdf) [rough draft, to be updated soon]Commentator: Professor Deborah Pearlstein11:00 — 11:30 am Break11:30 — 01:00 pm SESSION 2: Targeted Killings and the Rights of Non-CombatantsModerator: Professor William EwaldProfessor Jens Ohlin,… [read post]
12 Feb 2011, 1:28 pm by Kenneth Anderson
The discussants in several panels where this arose (Michael Lewis, Mary Ellen O'Connell, Jordan Paust, Amos Guiora, Geoff Corn), often coming from military backgrounds, tended to skepticism on the lawfulness of CIA participation - or if not skeptical as a matter of law, then skeptical as a matter of legal policy or legal best practices. [read post]
9 Jan 2011, 2:46 pm
(Delighted to welcome back alumna Laurie Blank, who contributes this guest post) As Professor Amos Guiora and I argue in "Don't Deny Detainees Their Day in Court," an op-ed published a few days ago in the Los Angeles Times, the idea that every person deserves his or her "day in court" is a fundamental principle in the United States and many countries worldwide. [read post]
21 Oct 2010, 7:17 pm by tjsllibrary
Freedom From Religion: Rights and National Security Amos N. [read post]
21 Oct 2010, 9:43 am by Marc DeGirolami
  Examples in the field I am most familiar with -- Religion Clause law -- include Professor Martha Nussbaum's book Liberty of Conscience, which was explicitly intended as a kind of bracing wake-up call to citizens of good will to come to the defense of an "American tradition" under threat, as well as (from an entirely different angle) Professor Marci Hamilton's slightly older book, God vs. the Gavel, which was again offered in the spirit of the alarm… [read post]
21 Oct 2010, 7:27 am by Paul Cassell
(Paul Cassell) Today at 12:15 at the University of Utah College of Law I will be debating my colleague Amos Guiora about whether Miranda rights should be extended to terrorists. [read post]
15 Oct 2010, 11:55 am by Marc DeGirolami
. - On Monday, October 25, the CLR and the Center for International and Comparative Law will host Professor Amos Guiora (as part of the Global Speaker Series) for a discussion of his book, Freedom from Religion. - On Friday, November 5, the CLR will host a symposium on the subject of Religious Legal Theory: Religion in Law and Law in Religion. - On Friday, November 12, the Ronald H. [read post]
3 Oct 2010, 8:11 pm by Chris Borgen
by Chris Borgen On behalf of all of us at Opinio Juris, I want to thank Amos Guiora for taking time to blog with us this past week about his new book, Freedom from Religion. [read post]
1 Oct 2010, 5:29 am by Amos Guiora
by Amos Guiora In response to the previous comments, I very much appreciate the justified concern raised regarding my identification of the danger posed by religious extremists. [read post]
30 Sep 2010, 10:05 am by Amos Guiora
by Amos Guiora Thank you to Prof Movsesian, Prof Cliteur and Rev. [read post]
29 Sep 2010, 11:00 am by Amos Guiora
by Amos Guiora Society has historically —unjustifiably and blindly—granted religion immunity. [read post]
29 Sep 2010, 10:43 am by Chris Borgen
by Chris Borgen We are very pleased to host for the next three days a discussion of Amos Guiora’s new book, Freedom from Religion: Rights and National Security(Oxford 2009). [read post]
29 Sep 2010, 10:41 am by Chris Borgen
by Chris Borgen Between Jose’s guest blogging and book discussion we are about to start on Amos Guiora’s book on religious freedom I  want to sandwich a short notice about my recent favorite topic: no-holds-barred full contact chess arbitration. [read post]
28 Aug 2010, 4:53 am by Lawrence Solum
The Legal Theory Bookworm recommends Freedom from Religion (Terrorism and Global Justice) by Amos Guiora. [read post]